Zoologger: Old magpies get wise to freeloading cuckoos

Eurasian magpies have a bad reputation. If you believe the folklore, they are cunning little swines that bring bad luck to anyone who sees them. In parts of the UK, you can still hear people reciting incantations that are supposed to ward off this bad luck. New Scientist is unaware of any evidence that this works.

Regardless, this bad reputation is all nonsense. In fact, magpies are often the victims of other, more ruthless species. They are regularly tricked by great spotted cuckoos into incubating and raising their young. When the magpie leaves its nest to forage, the cuckoo swoops in, lays its eggs and leaves the magpie to do the rest of the work.

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But the magpies are no fools. It now seems they gradually wise up to the cuckoos’ tricks, so older magpies are less likely to put up with a cuckoo egg in their nest.

Morning Mr Magpie

Eurasian magpies are not to be confused with Australian magpies, which belong to a different family of birds. The Australian birds are rather protective of their nests, swooping on people who pass by and sometimes attacking them.

These mental skills may explain why magpies can learn how to deal with cuckoos.

Cuckold that magpie

We already knew that some magpies are better than others at spotting foreign eggs in their nests. “However it was not known if females would respond to parasitic eggs in the same way or change their response throughout their lives,” says Mercedes Molina-Morales of the University of Granada in Spain. It could be something they learn, it could be genetic, or a combination of the two.

Molina-Morales and her colleagues followed 45 magpies over seven years, adding fake cuckoo eggs to their nests each breeding season. Every magpie that had never bred before accepted and cared for the fake eggs. They did so even if their mothers had rejected cuckoo eggs, so their behaviour was unlikely to be genetic.

Over the years, the team saw 12 magpies switch from accepting to rejecting the fake eggs. None switched the other way, suggesting they did learn.

“I think it does clinch the question for magpies,” says Naomi Langmore at the Australian National University in Canberra.

Molina-Morales found that the change in behaviour didn’t depend on how many times the magpies had been tricked, but on how old they were and how many times they had bred. It may be that they learned what their own eggs looked like, not what cuckoo eggs look like, she says.